Breakdown of Útsýnið frá fjallinu er svo fallegt að við setjumst í smástund og tökum myndir.
Questions & Answers about Útsýnið frá fjallinu er svo fallegt að við setjumst í smástund og tökum myndir.
Why does útsýnið end in -ið?
The base noun is útsýni, a neuter noun meaning view or scenery. The ending -ið is the suffixed definite article, so útsýnið means the view.
This is very common in Icelandic: instead of a separate word like English the, Icelandic often adds the article onto the end of the noun.
- útsýni = a view / view
- útsýnið = the view
Why is it frá fjallinu?
Because frá takes the dative case in Icelandic. The noun fjall means mountain, and its definite singular dative form is fjallinu.
So:
- fjall = mountain
- fjallið = the mountain
- frá fjallinu = from the mountain
This phrase tells you where the view is from: the view from the mountain.
Why is the adjective fallegt and not fallegur or falleg?
Adjectives in Icelandic agree with the noun they describe in gender, number, and case. Here the noun is útsýnið, which is neuter singular, so the adjective also has to be neuter singular:
- masculine: fallegur
- feminine: falleg
- neuter: fallegt
So Útsýnið ... er fallegt means The view ... is beautiful.
What does svo ... að mean here?
This is a very common structure meaning so ... that.
So:
- svo fallegt að ... = so beautiful that ...
It introduces a result:
- the view is so beautiful
- that we sit down for a while and take pictures
In other contexts, svo can mean things like so, thus, or like that, but in this pattern svo ... að is best understood as so ... that.
Is að here the infinitive marker to?
No. Here að is a conjunction meaning that.
You can tell because it is followed by a full clause:
- að við setjumst í smástund og tökum myndir
If að were the infinitive marker, it would be followed by an infinitive verb, like:
- að taka myndir = to take pictures
So in this sentence, að means that, not to.
Why is it setjumst? What does the -st mean?
Setjumst comes from the verb setjast, which means to sit down.
The -st ending is part of a middle/reflexive-type verb form that is very common in Icelandic. In this case, setjast is the normal verb for sit down.
So:
- setja = set, place
- setjast = sit down
- við setjumst = we sit down
It does not mean we set here. It means we seat ourselves / we sit down.
What is the difference between setjumst and sitjum?
This is an important distinction:
- sitja / sitjum = to be sitting
- setjast / setjumst = to sit down
So við sitjum means we are sitting, while við setjumst means we sit down.
In this sentence, setjumst makes sense because the beautiful view causes a new action: we decide to sit down for a while.
What does í smástund mean?
Í smástund means for a little while or for a moment.
The noun smástund means a short while or a brief moment, and the whole expression is a common Icelandic way to say that something lasts for a short time.
So:
- setjumst í smástund = sit down for a little while
It is best learned as a fixed expression rather than translated too literally word by word.
Why is smástund written as one word?
Because Icelandic very often forms compound words.
Here:
- smá = small, little
- stund = while, moment
Together they make:
- smástund = a short while
Compound nouns are extremely common in Icelandic, much more so than in English.
Why is it tökum myndir? What case is myndir?
Tökum is the present-tense first person plural of taka, meaning take.
Myndir is the direct object, so it is in the accusative plural. The singular noun is mynd meaning picture or photo.
So:
- mynd = picture
- myndir = pictures
- tökum myndir = take pictures
There is no definite article here, so it means take pictures, not specifically take the pictures.
How does the word order work in að við setjumst ... og tökum ...?
After að, Icelandic has a subordinate clause. In subordinate clauses, the word order is often more straightforward than in main-clause verb-second patterns.
So:
- að við setjumst ... = that we sit down ...
The subject við comes before the verb setjumst. Then og tökum myndir adds a second verb with the same subject:
- við setjumst ... og tökum myndir
- we sit down ... and take pictures
So the sentence has one subject, við, controlling both verbs.
How would a learner pronounce útsýnið and some of the special letters in this sentence?
A few things may stand out to an English speaker:
- ú and ý are long vowel letters
- ð is like the th in this, not the th in thin
- ll in fjallinu is not pronounced exactly like English ll
A rough learner-friendly guide:
- útsýnið ≈ OOT-see-nith or OOT-see-nidh
- fjallinu is harder, but you can start with something like fyat-li-nu or fyad-li-nu, depending on accent and level of precision
Pronunciation varies by dialect and phonetic environment, but the main point is that Icelandic spelling is systematic, and these sounds become easier once you learn the regular sound patterns.
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